In this question @lazyr asks how the following code of izip_longest iterator from here works:
def izip_longest_from_docs(*args, **kwds):
# izip_longest('ABCD', 'xy', fillvalue='-') --> Ax By C- D-
fillvalue = kwds.get('fillvalue')
def sentinel(counter = ([fillvalue]*(len(args)-1)).pop):
yield counter() # yields the fillvalue, or raises IndexError
fillers = repeat(fillvalue)
iters = [chain(it, sentinel(), fillers) for it in args]
try:
for tup in izip(*iters):
yield tup
except IndexError:
pass
When I was trying to understand how it works I stumbled into the question:
"What if IndexError is raised inside one of those iterators that are sent to izip_longest as parameters?".
Then I wrote some testing code:
from itertools import izip_longest, repeat, chain, izip
def izip_longest_from_docs(*args, **kwds):
# The code is exactly the same as shown above
....
def gen1():
for i in range(5):
yield i
def gen2():
for i in range(10):
if i==8:
raise IndexError #simulation IndexError raised inside the iterator
yield i
for i in izip_longest_from_docs(gen1(),gen2(), fillvalue = '-'):
print('{i[0]} {i[1]}'.format(**locals()))
print('\n')
for i in izip_longest(gen1(),gen2(), fillvalue = '-'):
print('{i[0]} {i[1]}'.format(**locals()))
And it turned out that the function in itertools module and izip_longest_from_docs work differently.
The output of the code above:
>>>
0 0
1 1
2 2
3 3
4 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
0 0
1 1
2 2
3 3
4 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:/..., line 31, in <module>
for i in izip_longest(gen1(),gen2(), fillvalue = '-'):
File "C:/... test_IndexError_inside iterator.py", line 23, in gen2
raise IndexError
IndexError
So, it's clearly seen, that the code of izip_longes from itertools did propagate IndexError exception (as I think it should), but izip_longes_from_docs 'swallowed' IndexError exception as it took it as a signal from sentinel to stop iterating.
My question is, how did they worked around IndexError propagation in the code in theitertools module?

sentinelthat it would implement some counter and raise it's own special Exception when needed. – ovgolovin Sep 12 '11 at 20:32